Effects of pH and Ca2+ on monomer-dimer and monomer-tetramer equilibria of chromogranin A. |
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Authors: | S H Yoo M S Lewis |
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Institution: | Laboratory of Cellular Biology, National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892. |
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Abstract: | Chromogranin A is a high capacity, low affinity Ca2+ binding protein which undergoes Ca2+- and pH-dependent conformational changes, and has recently been suggested to play a Ca2+-buffering role in the secretory vesicle of adrenal medullary chromaffin cell, the major inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-sensitive intracellular Ca2+ store of chromaffin cell (Yoo, S.H., and Albanesi, J.P. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 13446-13448). In the present study, it is shown that chromogranin A exists in a monomer-dimer equilibrium at pH 7.5 and in a monomer-tetramer equilibrium at pH 5.5. The pH appears monomer-tetramer equilibrium at pH 5.5. The pH appears to be a necessary and sufficient factor determining the types of oligomers formed. Although Ca2+ did not change the type of oligomerization, it had a very significant effect on the values of the thermodynamic parameters characterizing the associations. The delta G0 values for a monomer-dimer equilibrium were -7 to -8 kcal/mol, while those for a monomer-tetramer equilibrium were -20 to -23 kcal/mol. At pH 5.5, the values of delta H0, delta S0, and delta C0p were large and negative in the absence of Ca2+ and large and positive in the presence of 35 mM Ca2+, implying markedly different reaction mechanisms. Extrapolation of the results to 37 degrees C and 1 mM chromogranin A suggests that chromogranin A is virtually 100% tetramer at pH 5.5 in the presence of 35 mM Ca2+ but is 96% dimer at pH 7.5 in the absence of Ca2+, the two conditions resembling those seen in vivo. These results suggest that chromogranin A is mostly dimer in the endoplasmic reticulum and cis-Golgi area and is essentially all tetramer in the vesicle. |
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